This week on "Face the Nation with Margaret Brennan," May 29, 2022: Murphy, Hutchinson, Garza, Demings, Hockley, Corin
Senator Chris Murphy, Arkansas Governor Asa Hutchinson, Uvalde County Commissioner Ronald (Ronnie) Garza and more appear on "Face the Nation with Margaret Brennan" this Sunday.
cbsnews.comMelissa & Doug co-founder on confronting her depression
Melissa & Doug co-founder on confronting her depression Melissa Bernstein, co-founder of toy company Melissa & Doug, seemed to have it all. The firm that she started in 1988 with her husband Doug grew into an iconic brand worth a billion dollars. But despite the trappings of success, Bernstein still experienced an existential depression. Now for the first time she's opening up about her lifelong mental health battle in a new book, "LifeLines: An Inspirational Journey From Profound Darkness to Radiant Light." Correspondent David Pogue sat down with Melissa and Doug to talk about her ongoing journey, and about the launch of their online mental health hub LifeLines, which she hopes will help others who struggle with self-acceptance.
cbsnews.comDon't expect business travel to bounce back anytime soon, start-up founders say
Founder & President of PKFare Jason Song, Co-founder and Chief Business Officer of PingPong Payments Ning Wang speak during Day 2 of CNBC East Tech West at LN Garden Hotel Nansha Guangzhou on November 18, 2020 in Nansha, Guangzhou, China. The coronavirus pandemic has forced industries to rethink how they do business, resulting in a "new normal" that's here to stay, according to two start-up founders. Many small retailers were forced to shift to e-commerce platforms in an attempt to survive the pandemic's disruption to everyday life. But there are for example, in the U.S., a lot of home goods stores, mostly sold offline. "I think we are still seeing overall trend of digitization, e-commerce taking over offline, but accelerated in a somehow chaotic way."
cnbc.comNetflix says these three effects of the coronavirus crisis are impacting its business
In a letter to shareholders, the company said there are three ways the coronavirus crisis is impacting its business. "First, our membership growth has temporarily accelerated due to home confinement," Netflix said. The company announced it added 15.77 million paid international subscribers, versus the 7.2 million Wall Street expected. A stronger U.S. dollar is impacting international pricingNetflix expects a stronger U.S. dollar, partly due to the pandemic, to have a drag on international revenue growth. That decline in the average subscription price offsets its membership growth, Netflix said.
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